HIO3 is a strong acid that dissociates in water into H+ and IO3- ions, so it is an ionic compound.
Yes. KI is an ionic compound and dissociates completely to K+ and I- ions making it a strong electrolyte.
Potassium chloride is an ionic solution where the latter is a covalent compound (although it dissociates to ions in aqueous medium).
Though perchloric acid dissociates into ions in an aqueous medium, it is a covalent compound, more accurately, with a polar covalent bond.
Like most ionic compounds a a strong acid dissociates into ions when mixed with water.
HIO3 is a strong acid that dissociates in water into H+ and IO3- ions, so it is an ionic compound.
Arrhenius
Yes. KI is an ionic compound and dissociates completely to K+ and I- ions making it a strong electrolyte.
As an ionic compound it dissociates when added to water: NaHCO3 => Na+ + HCO3-
Potassium chloride is an ionic solution where the latter is a covalent compound (although it dissociates to ions in aqueous medium).
The chemical compound sodium acetate, with the formula NaC2H3O2, dissociates completely. It is also known as sodium ethanoate or NaOAc.
Though perchloric acid dissociates into ions in an aqueous medium, it is a covalent compound, more accurately, with a polar covalent bond.
Like most ionic compounds a a strong acid dissociates into ions when mixed with water.
Strong Acid
Dissociation of what? Table salt, for example (NaCl) dissociates into Na+ and Cl- ions in water.
The acid dissociates in water releasing H+ ions causing the compound to break up.
HCl gas is a covalent molecular compound, HCl in water dissociates to form H+(aq) + Cl-